When Desires Turn Addictive

There were a few months when I sometimes slept with three men in one day." So said Susan Cheever in her 1999 memoir, Note Found in a Bottle: My Life as a Drinker. So is Cheever - the thrice-married daughter of John Cheever, the alcoholic man of letters - a sex addict? In her new book, Desire: Where Sex Meets Addiction, the memoirist explores the depth and cost of her own dubious coping strategies.

MC: There is a lot of prurient interest in this book. Why did you write it? SC: I'm afraid some people are going to be disappointed because it isn't: "I slept with this one and I slept with that one." The book isn't a memoir about my sexual adventures; it's a search for answers to the question, Where does passion end and addiction begin?

MC: So where does it begin? SC: I thought I could just come up with an ironclad list of symptoms, but when I talked to experts, they mostly disagreed. But there is some consensus: There's obsession, there's never satiety, and there's always remorse. For me, the big thing is that you're always breaking a promise - for example, you promise yourself you're just going to have coffee with a man, then before you know it, you're in bed together.

MC: You've written about your alcoholism. Are you also a sex addict? SC: I definitely have an addictive personality.

MC: How is sex addiction different from alcoholism? SC: Our culture embraces sex addiction. If I drink too much or rack up credit-card debt or lose the rent in Vegas, that's bad. But if I have many lovers, that's good.

MC: Even for a woman? SC: Yes. If a woman is surrounded by lovers or if a woman has a lot of guys asking her out, that's considered wonderful. As a woman who's slept with a lot of men, I've always been complimented on my ability to attract men.

MC: Is there a cure for sex addiction? SC: I think 12-step programs really work, rehab really works, certain types of therapies and talking to other addicts really work. There are a lot of things that work - that isn't the problem. The problem is getting the addicts to say they're addicts. The problem is admitting it.

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